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Discover the general theory of systems failure and aging, providing a common scientific language for researchers in aging research. Explore the empirical laws of failure and aging and the links to evolutionary theory.
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Reliability Theory of Aging and Longevity Dr. Leonid A. Gavrilov, Ph.D. Dr. Natalia S. Gavrilova, Ph.D. Center on Aging NORC and The University of Chicago Chicago, Illinois, USA
What Is Reliability Theory? Reliability theory is a general theory of systems failure developed by mathematicians:
Reliability theory was historically developed to describe failure and aging of complex electronic (military) equipment, but the theory itself is a very general theory based on probability theory and systems approach.
Why Do We Need Reliability-Theory Approach? • Because it provides a common scientific language (general paradigm) for scientists working in different areas of aging research. • Reliability theory helps to overcome disruptive specialization and it allows researchers to understand each other. • May be useful for integrative studies of aging. • Provides useful mathematical models allowing to explain and interpret the observed data and findings.
Some Representative Publications on Reliability-Theory Approach to Aging
Gavrilov, L., Gavrilova, N. Reliability theory of aging and longevity. In: Handbook of the Biology of Aging. Academic Press, 6th edition, 2006, pp.3-42.
The Concept of System’s Failure In reliability theory failure is defined as the event when a required function is terminated.
Failures are often classified into two groups: • degradation failures, where the system or component no longer functions properly • catastrophic or fatal failures - the end of system's or component's life
Definition of aging and non-aging systems in reliability theory • Aging: increasing risk of failure with the passage of time (age). • No aging: 'old is as good as new' (risk of failure is not increasing with age) • Increase in the calendar age of a system is irrelevant.
Aging and non-aging systems Progressively failing clocks are aging (although their 'biomarkers' of age at the clock face may stop at 'forever young' date) Perfect clocks having an ideal marker of their increasing age (time readings) are not aging
Mortality in Aging and Non-aging Systems aging system non-aging system Example: radioactive decay
According to Reliability Theory:Aging is NOT just growing oldInsteadAging is a degradation to failure: becoming sick, frail and dead • 'Healthy aging' is an oxymoron like a healthy dying or a healthy disease • More accurate terms instead of 'healthy aging' would be a delayed aging, postponed aging, slow aging, or negligible aging (senescence)
According to Reliability Theory: • Onset of disease or disability is a perfect example of organism's failure • When the risk of such failure outcomes increases with age -- this is an aging by definition
Implications • Diseases are an integral part (outcomes) of the aging process • Aging without diseases is just as inconceivable as dying without death • Not every disease is related to aging, but every progression of disease with age has relevance to aging: Aging is a 'maturation' of diseases with age • Aging is the many-headed monster with many different types of failure (disease outcomes). Aging is, therefore, a summary term for many different processes.
Particular mechanisms of aging may be very different even across biological species (salmon vs humans) BUT • General Principles of Systems Failure and Aging May Exist (as we will show in this presentation)
Further plan of presentation • Empirical laws of failure and aging • Explanations by reliability theory • Links between reliability theory and evolutionary theory
Stages of Life in Machines and Humans Bathtub curve for human mortality as seen in the U.S. population in 1999 has the same shape as the curve for failure rates of many machines. The so-called bathtub curve for technical systems
Failure (Mortality) Laws • Gompertz-Makeham law of mortality • Compensation law of mortality • Late-life mortality deceleration
Death rate is a sum of age-independent component (Makeham term) and age-dependent component (Gompertz function), which increases exponentially with age. The Gompertz-Makeham Law μ(x) = A + R e αx A – Makeham term or background mortality R e αx – age-dependent mortality; x - age risk of death Aging component Non-aging component
Gompertz Law of Mortality in Fruit Flies Based on the life table for 2400 females of Drosophila melanogaster published by Hall (1969). Source: Gavrilov, Gavrilova, “The Biology of Life Span” 1991
Gompertz-Makeham Law of Mortality in Flour Beetles Based on the life table for 400 female flour beetles (Tribolium confusum Duval). published by Pearl and Miner (1941). Source: Gavrilov, Gavrilova, “The Biology of Life Span” 1991
Gompertz-Makeham Law of Mortality in Italian Women Based on the official Italian period life table for 1964-1967. Source: Gavrilov, Gavrilova, “The Biology of Life Span” 1991
Compensation Law of Mortality(late-life mortality convergence) Relative differences in death rates are decreasing with age, because the lower initial death rates are compensated by higher slope of mortality growth with age (actuarial aging rate)
Compensation Law of MortalityConvergence of Mortality Rates with Age 1 – India, 1941-1950, males 2 – Turkey, 1950-1951, males 3 – Kenya, 1969, males 4 - Northern Ireland, 1950-1952, males 5 - England and Wales, 1930-1932, females 6 - Austria, 1959-1961, females 7 - Norway, 1956-1960, females Source: Gavrilov, Gavrilova, “The Biology of Life Span” 1991
Compensation Law of Mortality (Parental Longevity Effects) Mortality Kinetics for Progeny Born to Long-Lived (80+) vs Short-Lived Parents Sons Daughters
Compensation Law of Mortality in Laboratory Drosophila 1 – drosophila of the Old Falmouth, New Falmouth, Sepia and Eagle Point strains (1,000 virgin females) 2 – drosophila of the Canton-S strain (1,200 males) 3 – drosophila of the Canton-S strain (1,200 females) 4 - drosophila of the Canton-S strain (2,400 virgin females) Mortality force was calculated for 6-day age intervals. Source: Gavrilov, Gavrilova, “The Biology of Life Span” 1991
Implications • Be prepared to a paradox that higher actuarial aging rates may be associated with higher life expectancy in compared populations (e.g., males vs females) • Be prepared to violation of the proportionality assumption used in hazard models (Cox proportional hazard models) • Relative effects of risk factors are age-dependent and tend to decrease with age
The Late-Life Mortality Deceleration(Mortality Leveling-off, Mortality Plateaus) The late-life mortality deceleration law states that death rates stop to increase exponentially at advanced ages and level-off to the late-life mortality plateau.
Mortality deceleration at advanced ages. • After age 95, the observed risk of death [red line] deviates from the value predicted by an early model, the Gompertz law [black line]. • Mortality of Swedish women for the period of 1990-2000 from the Kannisto-Thatcher Database on Old Age Mortality • Source: Gavrilov, Gavrilova, “Why we fall apart. Engineering’s reliability theory explains human aging”. IEEE Spectrum. 2004.
Mortality Leveling-Off in House FlyMusca domestica Our analysis of the life table for 4,650 male house flies published by Rockstein & Lieberman, 1959. Source: Gavrilov & Gavrilova. Handbook of the Biology of Aging, Academic Press, 2006, pp.3-42.
Non-Aging Mortality Kinetics in Later LifeIf mortality is constant then log(survival) declines with age as a linear function Source: Economos, A. (1979). A non-Gompertzian paradigm for mortality kinetics of metazoan animals and failure kinetics of manufactured products. AGE, 2: 74-76.
Non-Aging Failure Kinetics of Industrial Materials in ‘Later Life’(steel, relays, heat insulators) Source: Economos, A. (1979). A non-Gompertzian paradigm for mortality kinetics of metazoan animals and failure kinetics of manufactured products. AGE, 2: 74-76.
Testing the “Limit-to-Lifespan” Hypothesis Source:Gavrilov L.A., Gavrilova N.S. 1991. The Biology of Life Span
Implications • There is no fixed upper limit to human longevity - there is no special fixed number, which separates possible and impossible values of lifespan. • This conclusion is important, because it challenges the common belief in existence of a fixed maximal human life span.
Additional Empirical Observation:Many age changes can be explained by cumulative effects of cell loss over time • Atherosclerotic inflammation - exhaustion of progenitor cells responsible for arterial repair (Goldschmidt-Clermont, 2003; Libby, 2003; Rauscher et al., 2003). • Decline in cardiac function - failure of cardiac stem cells to replace dying myocytes (Capogrossi, 2004). • Incontinence - loss of striated muscle cells in rhabdosphincter (Strasser et al., 2000).
Like humans, nematode C. elegans experience muscle loss Herndon et al. 2002. Stochastic and genetic factors influence tissue-specific decline in ageing C. elegans. Nature 419, 808 - 814. “…many additional cell types (such as hypodermis and intestine) … exhibit age-related deterioration.” Body wall muscle sarcomeres Left - age 4 days. Right - age 18 days
What Should the Aging Theory Explain • Why do most biological species including humans deteriorate with age? • The Gompertz law of mortality • Mortality deceleration and leveling-off at advanced ages • Compensation law of mortality
The Concept of Reliability Structure • The arrangement of components that are important for system reliability is called reliability structure and is graphically represented by a schema of logical connectivity
Two major types of system’s logical connectivity • Components connected in series • Components connected in parallel Fails when the first component fails Ps = p1 p2 p3 … pn = pn Fails when all components fail Qs = q1 q2 q3 … qn = qn • Combination of two types – Series-parallel system
Series-parallel Structure of Human Body • Vital organs are connected in series • Cells in vital organs are connected in parallel
Redundancy Creates Both Damage Tolerance and Damage Accumulation (Aging) System without redundancy dies after the first random damage (no aging) System with redundancy accumulates damage (aging)
Reliability Model of a Simple Parallel System Failure rate of the system: Elements fail randomly and independently with a constant failure rate, k n – initial number of elements nknxn-1early-life period approximation, when 1-e-kx kx klate-life period approximation, when 1-e-kx 1 Source: Gavrilov L.A., Gavrilova N.S. 1991. The Biology of Life Span
Failure Rate as a Function of Age in Systems with Different Redundancy Levels Failure of elements is random Source: Gavrilov, Gavrilova, IEEE Spectrum. 2004.
Standard Reliability Models Explain • Mortality deceleration and leveling-off at advanced ages • Compensation law of mortality
Standard Reliability Models Do Not Explain • The Gompertz law of mortality observed in biological systems • Instead they produce Weibull (power) law of mortality growth with age: μ(x) = a xb
An Insight Came To Us While Working With Dilapidated Mainframe Computer • The complex unpredictable behavior of this computer could only be described by resorting to such 'human' concepts as character, personality, and change of mood.
Reliability structure of (a) technical devices and (b) biological systems Low redundancy Low damage load Fault avoidance High redundancy High damage load Fault tolerance X - defect